Left: Field Marshal
Horatio Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener of
Khartoum and Broome (1916). Kitchener was
drowned when the ship on which he was travelling on a
diplomatic mission to Russia, HMS Hampshire, stuck a
mine west of the Orknies. Over 600 crew and passengers
were lost.
Designed by Detmar Blow & Sir Mervyn Macartney.
Marble effigy with Sts George & Michael and a Pietà,
all by Sir William Ried Dick(1922-5).
Lord Kitchener is famous for the, often parodied,WW1
poster and his death was subject to numerous conspiracy
theories. In 1926 a hoaxer claimed a Norwegian fisherman
had discovered his body, which was brought to England
for burial in St Paul's. However the authorities opened
the coffin to find it was full of tar to act as a
weight. Lord Kitchener lies with HMS Hampshire in Scappa
Flow.

Frederick Leighton, 1st Baron
Leighton (1896). Bronze effigy and allegorical figures of Painting and
Sculprture. The effigy lies on a marble sarcophagus.
'Sculpture' holds Lord Leighton's 'Sluggard',
a statuette. By Sir
Thomas Brock (1902)Leighton was a painter and sculptor and received a
knighthood in 1878 and was created baronette in 1886.He was given a peerage in the New Year's Honours
1896, the first artist to be so honoured, but died the
following day. He thus holds the dubious record of
holding a peerage for the shortest time.Seen behind is the 57th/77th Regiment Crimean War
Memorial by Marochetti

Archbishop Frederick Temple (1902).
Archbishop
of Canterbury, who was father of a later Archvishop of
Canterbury, William Temple. He was buried in Canterbury
Cathedral.
Bronze relief of the Archbishop at prayer by Pomeroy (1905)
Photograph by George P Landow from
The Victorian Web. Used with permission.

Second Bay

Major General Charles George Gordon (1885)
The famous 'Gordon of Khartoum' Bronze effigy on
black marble sarcophaus by Boehm. Behind is a
relief of the General teaching young African boys.

Behind the General Gordon monuments are the
following reliefs:

1.To the Afghan Campaign (1879-80) Marble by J. Forsyth2. Left:Major-General Sir Arthur
Wellesley Torrens (1855) Crimean battle scene
by Marochetti.
Hewas badly wounded in the Crimean Campaignand died shortly afterwards. Buried in Père-Lachaise,
Paris3. Below:Major-General Sir Herbert Stewart (1885)
Tripartite bronze with central portrait by Boehm.
Anglo-Zulu War, First Boer Way. Commanded the Gordon relief
expedition but died of wounds on the way back from Khartoum.
Buried near the wells of Jakdul, where he died.

On pillar between the second and third bays:Earl Roberts (1914) Marble bust with with
bronze and marble surround by John Tweed (not shown)

Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, 1st
Duke of Wellington (1852) Soldier and statesman. With
Blücher the victor at Waterloo and twice
Tory prime minister. The monument is by Alfred Stevens;
begun in 1857, it was not finished until 1912, thirty seven
years after Stevens's death. White marble with twelve columns; a
contrasting dark bronze frieze with churubs' heads. Bronze
panels on the pedestals list Wellington's victories. Recumbent
bronze effigy of the Iron Duke lies on a sarcophagus under the
main arch. Above two pairs of bronze allegorical figures sit at
either end: Valour & Cowardice and Truth & Falsehood. Above is a
bronze equestrian statue of the Duke, arm raised in command; by
Tweed.

Captain Richard Rundle Burges RN
(1797) Marble by Thomas Banks (1797)
Victory hands the young RN officer a sword. Without its
pedestal and not in its original position. Cpt Burges was
killed aboard his ship HMS Ardent at the Battle of
Camperdown, an engagement in the French Revolutionary Wars.
Around the niche are three Biblical reliefs representing war
by Woodington (1862) from the SW chapel; these originally were a
backdrop for the Wellington monument.

Second Bay

Third Bay

Thomas Fanshaw Middleton DD, Bishop of Calcutta
(1822)by J. G. Lough (1832) He died of sun stroke in 1822
and was buried in Calcutta Cathedral

In the niche behind are reliefs representing Peace by W.
Calder Marshall; from SW chapel. see above

Captain George Blagdon Westcott RN (1798)by
Banks (1802-1805) On the plinth Father Nile with many
children and flanking naval battle scenes. Not in situ.
Killed in action at the Batlle of the Nile on board his ship
HMS Majestic. Buried at sea
Behind can be seen reliefs with battle scenes by Nobel:
left to Cpt Lyons (1855) with portrait by
Matochetti; right to Granville Gower Loch
(1853) Between these is a Biblical scene again from
the SW chapel by Calder Marshall (1863)

Lt-Gen Sir Ralph Abercromby (1801)
by Westmacott (1802-5) Soldier and politician.
Injured at Battle of Alexandria (Napoleonic Wars) and died later
aboard HMS Fondroyant. Buried in the commandery of the
Grand Master of the Knights of St John, Malta. A square in
Liverpool and a public house in Manchester are named after him.

Lt-Gen Sir John Moore (1809)
by Bacon Jnr (1810-15) Died at the Battle of
Corunna (Peninsular War) and was buried in the ramparts of that
town, where his monument may be seen.

Soldier and colonial
administrator; remembered as a general in the American War
of Independence. He died in India and is buried at Gauspur
overlooking the Ganges.

Vice Admiral Horatio
Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson (1805) By Flaxman
(1808-18) Killed by a sniper on board HMS Victory at the
Battle of Trafalgar. His body was preserved in a cask of brandy
with camphor and myrrh and taken to Gibraltar; here it was
transfered to a lead coffin containing spirit of wine
(concentrated alcohol) and later buried in St Paul's (see below)

Mjr-Gen Sir
Edward Pakenham & Mjr-Gen Samuel Gibbs. By
Westmacott,(1816-23) They were both killed at the Battle of New
Orleans (American Civil War) Mjr-Gen Pakenham's body was reurned
to Ireland in a cask of rum to be buried in the family vault in
Killcican, County West Meath.

Photographs of Turner are by George P
Landow from
The Victorian Web. Used with permission.

NOT ILLUSTRATED

Capt Hardinge (1808) Relief
by Charles Manning

Capt Miller Relief by
Flaxman (1801-5)

General Gillespie by
Chantrey (1816)

East Aisle

Above: Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood, 1st Baron Collingwood
(1810) by Westmacott (1813-17) A partner of
Nelson and fequently Nelson's successor in command. At Trafalgar
he commanded the Royal Sovereign, a faster ship than
Nelson's as its copper bottom had been renewed. He died on board
Ville de Paris while returning to England. Buried next
to Nelson.Right: Admiral of the Fleet Richard Howe, 1st
Earl Howe (1799) by Flaxman (1803-11)Fought in
the War of the Austrian Succession, the Jacobite Rising of '45,
the Seven Years' War, the American Revolutionary War and the
French Revolutionary War. Died in London but was buried in the
family vault in St Andrew's Church, Langar, Notts.

Photographs of Cpt Scott and Gen
Lawrence are by George P Landow from
The Victorian Web. Used with permission.

General Sir George Augustus Eliot, 1st Baron Heathfield
(1790)
by Rossi (1823-25) Fought in the Seven Years'
War and famous for his command at the Great Siege of Gibraltar.
Died at Schloss Kalkofen, Azchen. He was buried initially in the
grounds of the Schloss; he was then reburied at
Heathfield, Sussex; and later still buried at Buckland
Monachorum, Devon.

Captain Scott and members of his
expedition Bronze by Sir
Nicholson Babb (1915) 'Scott of the Antartic'

Mjr-Gen. Daniel Houghton (1811)
by Chantrey.
kia at Albuera (Penninsular War)Lt-Col Sir William Myers Bt By Josephus Kendrick
(1817)
Also kia at AlbueraCharles Robert Cockerell (1863) Designed by
F P Cockerell & executed by Thomas Woolner. Architect,
archaeologist and writer. Among other buildings he
designed The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford; branches of the
Bank of England at Plymouth, Bristol, Manchester and
Liverpool; and the interior of St George's Hall,
Liverpool.

Nave

Left: Mjr-Gen.Thomas Dundas
(1794)
by
Bacon Jnr (1798-1805) Fought in the Seven
Years' War, the American Revolutionary War and the
French Revolutionary War.Made governor of
Guandeloup(Leeward Islands) after French
surrender. Died shortly afterwards and was buried in the
primary bastion of Fort Maltide. Later when the French
retook the island the governor ordered his body be
exumed and given as prey to the birds of the air.
Above: Cpt Robert Faulkner RNby Rossi
(1797-1803) Kia aboard his ship the Blanche
frigate while engaging La Pique, a French
frigate; French revolutionary wars.

Left:Mjr-Gens Arthur Gore and John
Byne SkerrettDesigned by W Tallimache;
carved by Chantrey Both kia 1814 during
the assault at Bergen op Zoom, Netherlands (Peninsular
War)
Above: Mjr-Gen. Andrew Hay (1814) by
Hopper Fought in the American Revolutionary
War, the French Revolutionary War and the Peninsular
War. Shortly after news of Napoleon's abdication he was
kia at he Battle of Bayonne (France), the last battle of
the Peninsular War.

RELIEFS - NOT SHOWN

Mjr-Gens Robert Craufurd and Mjr-Gen Hrnry Mackinnon (1812)
by Bacon Jnr.
Gen Mackinnon was killed by the explosion of an enemy magazine
at the seige of Ciudad Rodrigo (Peninsular War); Gen. Craufurd -
known as 'Black Bob, because of his mood swings - died of wounds
also at that seige.Mjr-Gen J K Mackenzie and Brig-Gen. Langworth (1809) designed by C
Manning; executed by S Manning. Both killed at
Talavera (Peninsular War)

East Aisle

RELIEFS - NOT SHOWN

Reginald Brabazon 12th earl of Meath (1929)
by Herman Cawthra
Politician and philanthropist. Responsible for the
introduction of Empire Day. Buried in the church yard of the
Church of Ireland church in Delgany, County Wicklow.Admiral Sir Charles Napier RN (1860) by G G
Adams (1860)
Served sixty years in the Royal Navy in the French
Revolutionary Wars, Napoleonic Wars, War of 1812,
Egyptian-Ottoman/Syrian War and the Crimean War. He was a
dark, eccentric and untidy man of 14 stone and variously
nicknamed 'Swarthy Charlie', 'Mad Charlie' or 'Dirty
Charlie'.Mjr-Gen. Bernard Foord Bowes (1812) by Chantrey
Served in Ireland, America, Gibraltar. Kia Salamanca,
Spain (Peninsular War)Mjr-Gen John Gaspard Le Marchant (1812) designed by
J Smith; executed by Rossi.
Served in French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.
Kia Salamanca, Spain (Peninsular War) Buried in Olive
Grove near where he died.Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan (1900) bronze by
Goscombe John (1903)
Composerbest known for operatic collaboration with librettist W
S GilbertSir John Stainer (1902) by H Pegram (1903)
Composer and organist. For a time organist at St Paul's

Above:Bishop
Charles James Blomfield DD (1857) marble by
George Richmond (1863) Buried at All Saints,
Fulham, LondonLeft: John Donne (1631) By
Nicholas Stone. Dean of St Paul's and poet. The
effigy was probably conceived as recumbent but later the
urn was added and it was set upright because of lack of
space. Completion of the effigy was subcontracted to
Humphrey Meyer and the original surround to
Robert Flower. The epitaph is by Donne himself. Damaged in the Great Fire but restored from the
etchings of Hollar and set here.Far Left: Bishop Mandell Creighton
(1901) Bronze statue by Sir Hamo
Thornycroft (1905) Buried in the crypt (see below)

Above, left to right: William Blake (1827)
Poet, painter
and printer; his most famous poem
being 'And did those feet in ancient times'
Buried in Bunhill Fields, London, where a
stone marks his approximate grave site, the actual
site being lost. He and his wife
also have a memorial in Westminster Abbey.
Mary Wren (1712) Daughter-in-law of Sir
Christopher
Edmund Wiseman (1704) Attrib to William
Woodman Snr
Left: Enlargement of Mary Wren's cartouche

Above: William Holder (1697) & Susannah,
Wren's sister, by Gibbons. Note that his
inscription is in Latin while hers is in English.
Right: Jane Wren (1702) Wren's
only daughter, By Francis Bird
Far Right: Randolph Caldecott (1846)
by Alfred Gilbert (1887-95) The
figure is in painted aluminium whilst the pillars
are bronze. He was an artist and book illustrator.
He died in St Augustine, Florida, where he is
buried. There is also a memorial to him in Chester
Cathedral, his birth place.

South Wall - First Recess

Left:Sir
Christopher Wren (1723) The large stone
slab above was designed by Mylne (1807) and
includes the famous words: 'Lector, si
monumentum requiris, circumspice' which
translated reads, 'Reader, if you seek his monument,
look around you' Architect responsible for building
52 City of London churches - including St Paul's -
after the great fire of 1666, as well as many
secular buildings, including the Royal Naval
College, Dartmouth. He was also Slavilian Professor
of Astronomy at Oxford and his activities also
included physics and mathematics.

Immediately above Wren's stone is a
tablet reading 'Remember the men who made the shapely
stones of St Paul's Cathedral 1675-1708: Edward Strong,
Thomas Strong and all who laboured with them.'
To the right can just be see the Coade stone bust (1819)
to James Barry (1806) painter; and
below this the tablet to Robert Hooke (1703)
Also an architect as well as an all round
scientist and rival of Newton. Among his achievments in
physics is Hooke's Law (of elasticity) and in
microscopy coining the term cell for a
biological unit.
Also in this section is a bronze bust of Walter Godfrey
Allen by David McFall (1959).
Architect and surveyor of St Paul's

The early burials in this area have plain slabs
such as that toJoseph M W Turner (1851),the painter. See above top left. Other
such stones include those of: Henry Fuseli
(1825), Swisspainter, draughsman and
writer whose works often deal with the supernatural;
George Dance the Younger (1825),
architect, surveyor and portrait painterwhose
buildings include the Guildhall, the Mansion House and
the offices of the RCS;William West
(1861), oil and watercolourist; Sir
Joshua Reynolds (1792), portrait painter.

Above left: Bishop Randolp Heber
(1826)
Note the relief of him baptising, behind and to his
right.Above centre:Sir Edwin Henry Landseer
(1873)
byWoolner (1882).
Painter and scuptor, famous for the bronze lions at the
base of Nelson's column. The relief at the lower part of
the monument is based on his painting The Old
Shepherd's Chief Mourner.
Above left:
Edward George Earle Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton
(1873) by Sir Alfred Gilbert (after 1891)
Whig politician, novelist, poet and playwright.
Quotation: The pen is mightier than the sword.
Buried in Westminster Abbey

Also - but not shown :John Rennie the Elder (1821) Scottish
civil engineer

First Pier
East Face

Left top:
George Richmond (1896) Red marble
with bronze roundle by W Blake Richmond.
Painter and portraitist. Buried in Highgate
Cemetery.Below is a war memorial to cathedral staff who died
in Word War I: Walter Baker, Alfred Ballard, George A
Chandler & Thomas W Knowles. Note it gives the date as
1914-19, the later being the date of the Treaty of
Versailles rather than the Armistice.Centre: Anthony Van Dyck
(1641) by H Poole (1928) Flemish
painter and etcher who became a leading court painter,
particularly noted for portraits of Charles I and his
family. He died in 1641 and was buried on Old St Paul's
but his tomb was destroyed in the Great Fire.Right top: Sir Aston Webb
(1930)
by William McMillan Architect and former president of the RA and
RIBA. His building include the central building of the
University of Birmingham, the main section of the
Victoria and Albert Museum, the Admiralty Arch and the
Queen Victoria Memorial before Buckingham Place, of which he
designed the facade.Right bottom: Sir Frank
Dicksee (1928) Painter and illustrator. Former
president of the RA

South Face

Mostly war correspondents from the
1900's.

Shown is the monument to Sir William Howard
Russel LLD (1905) by Sir Bertram McKennal.
The inscription states that he was the first of the
great war correspondents and reported from the Crimea,
India, USA, France and Africa.

Hon Sec of the Church
Missionary Society. One of the foremost Protestant
mission stratagists and campaigners. Frequently
lobbied parliament on social issues of the day,
notably on the total eradication of the Atlantic
slave trade.

Buried in Mortlake, Surrey

North

Top left: Sir Willlam Hamo
Thornycroft (1925) by C L Hartwood
Sculptor whose works include the statue of Oliver
Cromwell, outside the Palace of Westminster, and
the statue of King Alfred, at Winchester.
Top centre:Sir George Frampton (1928) by
Ernest Gillick (1930) Sculptor whose work include
the Peter Pan Statue and the Edith Cavell
Memorial.Bronze child holding a minature Peter Pan. He was
cremated at Golder's Green Crematorium, where his ashes
lie.
Top right: Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens
(1944) by W Curtis
Green (1946) Architect, designer of many country hose and
the Cenotaph in Whitehall.Cremated at
Golder's Green.
Bottom left: William Reid Dick
(1961)
Scottish sculptor and soldier, in which latter
capacity he served with the Royal Engineers in France
and Palestine. His works include the Kitchener
Memorial, the statue of F D Roosevelt in
Grosvenor Square, London and the statue of Lady
Godiva in Coventry. Buried in St Paul's
Bottom centre: Sir Alfred Gilbert (1932)
by Gilbert Ledward (1936) Sculptor and goldsmith as
well as painter in oils. He designed the Shafesbury
Memorial Fountain in Picadilly Circus,
depicting Anteros (put popularly known as
Eros), one of the first statues to be cast in
aluminium. The latter figure is depicted on the bronze
relief.
Bottom right: Sir Henry Maximilian 'Max' Beerbohm
(1956) Broadcaster, essayist, parodist and
caricaturist. Cremated at Genoa and his ashed buried in
St Paul's.

Second Pier

East Face

Dr Billing (1898) with painted
ceramic portrait.

Benjamin Webb (1885) by
Armstead Prebendary at
St Paul's One of the founders of the
Ecclesiological Society. Writer on
ecclesiastical matters and of hymns

The photograph the right are by George P Landow from
The Victorian Web. Used with permission.

John Martyn (1680)
Publisher and
bookseller.
He began his own independent business at the sign of
the Bell in St Paul's Chuchyard in 1651 Attrib to
Edward Pierce

First Pier
North Face

John Singer Sargent (1925)
American
artist and portraitist; trained in Paris, then moved
to London. He
designed the crucifixion on his monument. Buried in
Brookwood Cemetery

West Face

Sir Albert Edward Richardson (1966)
Architect and professor of architecture at
University College, London. Founder of the
Georgian Group and to lived like the Georgians
he refused to have electricity installed in his
house until persuaded otherwise by his wife.
Designed Manchester Opera House and was responsible
for much restoration work.Designed by Marshall Sissons; carved by
D. McFall

South Face

Sir William Quiller Orchardson (1910)
by W Reynolds-Stephens (1913 Scottish portraitist and painter of domestic and
historical scenes, such as Napoleon going into exile
aboard the Bellepheron. The small
bronze is after one of his paintings

South Wall

Canon Henry Liddon (1890)
by Kemp.
Theologian and chancellor of St Paul's; refused
a bishopric. Friend of Lewis Carrol with whom he
travelled to Moscow where he made approaches to the
orthodox clergyseeking closer links with the C of EFrank Holl (1888) Painter and
portraitist. Buried in Highgate Cemetery. Portrait bust by
Boehm (1889); marble surround by Alfred
Gilbert (1893)George Clement Martin
(1916) by H
Pegram (1917) Organist who served at St Paul's

Sir Stafford Cripps(1952)
Bronze bust by Jacob Epstein (1953) British
Labour politician who served in the Attlee post-war
government, holding the post of Chancellor of the
Exchequer, among others. Buried in Sapperton, Gloucester

IvorNovello (1951) Portrait
bust by John Skelton (1973) Welsh composer and
actor, who wrote 'Keep the Home Fires Burning'. Cremated
at Golder's Green Crematorium, where his ashes lie.

South Aisle Bay

Sir John MacDonald (1891)
Scottish
born Canadian politician and the first prime
minister of Canada. Buried in Cataraqui Cemetery,
Kingston.

NOT SHOWN

Bishop John Jackson(1885)
Marble
recumbent effigy by Woolmer (1887)Lt-Col Sir Duncan MacDougall (1862)
Fought in Peninsular War and American War
of Independence. Buried in St Paul's Bust by G G
AdamsJ Wasdale (1807) Urn by R
BloreRichard Bourke, 6th Earl of Mayo (1872)
Viceroy of India and member of British
Conservative Party; born in Dublin. Assassinated by
a convict while visiting a settlement at Port Blair,
Andaman Islands. Buried in the ruined church in
Johnstown, Co Kildare.Cpt Thomas by Adams 1860Sir Henry Parkes (1896) Born
in Warwickshire, he emigrated to Australia in 1839
and began working as a labourer. Became a
businessman and politician and premier of New South
Wales. Bust by Brock 1887Robert Mylne (1811) Scottish
srchitect and civil engineer. Studied in Rome under
Piranesi. His works include Blackfriars' Bridge and
the Gloucester and Sharpness Canal.

On the walls can be seen a series of
tablets to 20th century soldiers (1979)

General Sir Sam Browne VC (1901) Relief
of a sepoy by Forsyth (1903)During the Indian Mutiny of 1857 the then Captain
Sam Browne had his left arm severed at the shoulder by a
sword cut in battle. He was awarded the VC for this
engagement. Without his left hand he was unable to
control his scabbard or draw his sword and he came up
with the idea of wearing a second belt over the right
shoulder which would hook into the heavy leather belt
around the waiste and hold the scabbard and sword in
position. Hence the origin of the 'Sam Browne' It is
traditionally worn by those entitles to carry swords -
comissioned officers and warrant officers - although for
most of its history it has supported a heavy pistol.

Also - not
shown - Mjr Frederick Jackson (1938)
Bronze relief of a polar scene by

A Southwick

Here are
several mainly Victorian military monuments.

Above left: Lt Col Sir William Hutt
Curzon Wyllie (1909) Marble.Served in
theAfghan Warand in India, where
he occupied a number of administrative and
diplomatic posts.
Assassinated by an Indian revolutionary in London
while attending an event with his wife. Buried in
Richmond, Surrey.
Above right: Mjr Gen Sir John Eardley
Wilmot Inglis (1862) Served in Canada and
India. Designed by W H Seth-Smith
with bronze reliefs by Derwent Wood (1896),
one of the seige of Lucknow.Buried in St
Paul's.
Right: Mjr Gen Sir Charles Metcalfe
MacGregor Anglo-Indian explorer,
geographer, writer and soldier. By S Albano

The photographs above and to the right are by George P Landow from
The Victorian Web. Used with permission.

Vice Admiral Horation Nelson (1805)
The black marble sarcophagus was made by
Bernadetto de Rovezzano (1524-9) for the tomb
of Cardinal Wolsey, who was to have been buried at
Windsor. The pedestal pf granite and black and white
marbly was probably by Mylne (1806-7)

Bays around the Rotunda

First Bay

Florence Nightingale
(1910)
Red marble and
alabaster by A G Walker (1916).
Social reformer, statiscisian and founder of modern
nursing. The 'lady with the lamp' came into
prominence during the Crimean Way

Top left: Admiral
of the Fleet Sir Henry Bradwardine
Jackson (1929) Pioneer of ship to ship wireless
communication. WWI naval officer whose reputation
suffered when German destroyers appeared in the Channel
1916.
Top centre: Captain Sir John Hawley Glover
RN (1885) Naval officer and later colonial
governor
Top right: Admiral of the Fleet Sir Charles
Edward Madden Bt (1935) WWI naval officer
Bottom left: Admiral Charles William de la
Poer Beresford, 1st Baron Beresford (1919)
Popular'Charlie B' managed to combine being a
naval officer and a MP. His later career sufferend owing
to a long standing dispute about naval reforms with
Admiral of the Fleet Sir John Fisher, who blocked his
promotion.Buried Putney Vale Cemetery, South
London. By Tweed
Bottom centre: Admiral Sir Edward
Codrington (1851) Hero of Trafalgar and
Navarino.Said to have been buried in St
Peter's Eaton Square but records examined in 1954 state
that he was buried in Brookwood Cemetery.
Bottom right: Admiral of the Fleet Sir
Frederick W Richards (1912) Rose to become
First Naval Lord By Pomeroy

Fifth Bay

Right: Captain John Cooke RN.
(1805) American War of Independance, French
Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars. Killed on
board Bellerophon during hand to hand
fighting at Trafalgar. Buried at sea.By Westmacott (1807-10)Above: Captain George Duff
RN (1805) Followed the same service career
as Captain Cooke (right) Killed by a cannon ball at
Trafalgar. Buried at sea. By Bacon Jnr

Lt-Gen Bernard Cyril
Reyberg, 1st Baron
Freybery VC, DSO and 3 bars (1963) Bronze by Oscar Vernon.
He was the youngest general in WWI and led the New
Zeeland Expeditionary Forces in WWII. 7th
Governor-General of New Zeeland. Buried at St Martha's,
near Guildford, Surrey

Sir Thomas
Heneage (1594) & Anne (1592) MP and
courtier at the court of Elizabeth I

Other Monuments

Left: Admiral
George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney
(1792) by Rossi (1810-15)
Went to sea at 14 and rose through the ranks. Although a
very capable officer, he was also vain, selfish and
unscrupulous in his persuit of prize money and
furthering the fortunes of his family his family. Saw
service in War of Austrian Succession, Seven Years' War,
American Revolutionary War. Four Anglo-Duthch War.
Buried at Old Arlesford, Hampshire. Rodney Atreet in
Liverpool is named after him.
Below Left: Admiral Sir Pulteney Malcolm
(1832) by
E H Baily (1842)Served in American
and French Revolutionary Wars, War of 1812 and
Napoleonic Wars.

Below Centre: General Sir Charles JamesNapier
(1853)
by G G Adams (1856) Served in
Peninsular War; C-in-C India. Buried in Royal Garrison
Church, Portsmouth. The city of Napier in New Zeeland is
named after him as well as ten English Pubs.